Only in your mind...
Is that like "only in your mind" do you believe you are right, in spite of the direct rebuttals by Victor, BFA, and Senti among others? Seems then we would be in the same boat.... I'll scoot over...
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Only in your mind...
Is that like "only in your mind" do you believe you are right, in spite of the direct rebuttals by Victor, BFA, and Senti among others? Seems then we would be in the same boat.... I'll scoot over...
You could name a hundred names and it still wouldn't make them right. Let me ask you the same question I asked them. Can a Christian live a life style of breaking any one of the Ten Commandments and still be right with God? In other words, can I go around killing, stealing and lying and still be right with God?
A law that can be broken is not God's law by definition. Universal law is simply that which is. Petulance is no more a challenge to God's law than jumping off a ledge is a challenge to gravity.Can a Christian live a life style of breaking any one of the Ten Commandments and still be right with God?
And that's the golden insight. And it doesn't mean that we wouldn't be better off if they were in a different place - it means that how they move from one place to another matters."people are where they are suppose to be...."
You already know that this argument is the same that Paul encountered and wrote about in Romans 3:You could name a hundred names and it still wouldn't make them right. Let me ask you the same question I asked them. Can a Christian live a life style of breaking any one of the Ten Commandments and still be right with God? In other words, can I go around killing, stealing and lying and still be right with God?
That "reason" lies in the writings of Ellen White, and until reliance on her is dismissed, the "evolution" you hope would happen isn't going to. The prophet is dead, and her codified doctrines don't mutate from the grave. Just look at the general reception the 1957 QoD has failed to garner, which illustrates the tenacity of the prophet in the grave.And that's the golden insight. And it doesn't mean that we wouldn't be better off if they were in a different place - it means that how they move from one place to another matters.
This is why a punctuated dissolution of the Sabbath belief could be harmful. We hold that belief for a reason. And, with openness, we evolve and our doctrines evolve. And sometimes evolution takes billions of years!
People cling to beliefs for a reason.
Victor -- I know some Adventists who might hold their belief about the Sabbath because of what they have learned from Ellen White.That "reason" lies in the writings of Ellen White.
Resistance is not futile.Victor -- I know some Adventists who might hold their belief about the Sabbath because of what they have learned from Ellen White.
I know many more Adventists who have other reasons.
And a few nonAdventists who have non-Ellen reasons of their own for holding similar beliefs.
Sabbatarians are not the Borg.
I agree that resistance is not futile -- because I'm not a Borg member.Resistance is not futile.
Did you forget that I was a sabbatarian?
I believe that you're introducing a red herring, and not perceiving my response to Avonia's premise that Adventist doctrines will "evolve" over the course of time. Within the confines of Adventism, those doctrines are codified in a body of literature that does not change, regardless of the time element. As long as that literary body is appealed to, I regard an expectation that Adventist doctrines will change to be without merit.I agree that resistance is not futile -- because I'm not a Borg member.![]()
Worth repeating.A law that can be broken is not God's law by definition. Universal law is simply that which is.
That's obviously your sense of things, yes.I believe that you're introducing a red herring, and not perceiving my response to Avonia's premise that Adventist doctrines will "evolve" over the course of time. Within the confines of Adventism, those doctrines are codified in a body of literature that does not change, regardless of the time element. As long as that literary body is appealed to, I regard an expectation that Adventist doctrines will change to be without merit.
I'm glad this has been your experience.As far as the sabbath is concerned, you're in a unique position to learn the fullness of the sabbath and what it was, and the reality it was a shadow of. These are questions that most Christians who assemble on Sunday don't come to the position of addressing, and answers regarding the law never come for the reason that they're never asked in the first place. My own experience has been that dedicating myself to the sabbath according to the law has caused me a deep appreciation for God's redemption many don't formulate a rational basis for.
No, I haven't - but before it would be of interest, it would need to be demonstrated that it has an effect on altering the Fundamental Beliefs that are derived from source documentation. I remain focused on the source material.That's obviously your sense of things, yes.
Yet I find the likelihood of doctrinal evolution to be much higher than you'd wager because of how much doctrines within Adventism have fluctuated and adapted both to internal triggers and to external pressures over the last 150 years. Bull and Lockhart's Seeking a Sanctuary is a useful precis of these changes. Perhaps you have read it.
I perceive that was the behind QoD, of which I have seen open disdain written by Adventist clergy to describe. Change is not embraced by those intent on being purposely distinctive, and several have opined on this forum that this is precisely the intent of those reigning in the GC of the SDA church.My experience is that Adventism is not a revolutionary's community. It moves incrementally, and also moves ahistorically, and that often fools observers, traditionalists, and antsy idealists like myself into the sense that it does not change at all.
It hasn't moved in 160 years.It is a slow-rolling stone.
You never know how short one comes in light of the law that we have no means to comply with until one actually tries to comply for themselves. As I mentioned, it brings a new appreciation for God's redemption for the law that held its recipients in the past tense.I'm glad this has been your experience.
You might also be interested to hear that more and more "postmodern"/"emergent"-era Christians are participating in similar learning processes, whatever their denominational backgrounds might have once been.
QoD was regarded by its primary recipients (Walter Martin and Donald Barnhouse) to be an official product of the GC meant to describe the official beliefs held by the SDA church. As an formal product written by the governing body, it doesn't regard deviation from what the GC codified as official doctrinal views. It can't. You should know that the opinions within Adventism are so varied that it would be impossible to codify anything that both reflected what Ellen White passed down and the findings of a portion of the membership who found it necessary to abandon what was passed down.Yes, I think you'd really enjoy the read.
The chief weakness of QoD was that it was a peripheral and not central effort that occluded the diversity of opinion and conviction across the church. That which isn't large enough to contain the voices of the people cannot truly claim to speak for them. This is one of the church's long-term lessons.
There was diversity of opinion in the church on positions shared during the Martin-Barnhouse-Froom-Unruh et al. conversations. This is because there was vibrant discussion of these issues through the 40s and 50s, not just after the discussions were published as QoD, and not just by those who were not part of those limited discussions. QoD did speak for a segment of the church, but it did not speak for others, and this is part of the issue I raised in post 28.QoD was regarded by its primary recipients (Walter Martin and Donald Barnhouse) to be an official product of the GC meant to describe the official beliefs held by the SDA church. As an formal product written by the governing body, it doesn't regard deviation from what the GC codified as official doctrinal views. It can't. You should know that the opinions within Adventism are so varied that it would be impossible to codify anything that both reflected what Ellen White passed down and the findings of a portion of the membership who found it necessary to abandon what was passed down.
That it was later regarded as an effort to obfuscate official doctrinal views by both the recipients and those who were not polled regarding their views caused QoD to lose any impact those who wrote it may have hoped it would garner.
You haven't addressed the source material at all. Remember I had commented on that when you asked if I had read a book you like:There was diversity of opinion in the church on positions shared during the Martin-Barnhouse-Froom-Unruh et al. conversations. This is because there was vibrant discussion of these issues through the 40s and 50s, not just after the discussions were published as QoD, and not just by those who were not part of those limited discussions. QoD did speak for a segment of the church, but it did not speak for others, and this is part of the issue I raised in post 28.
Simply looking at the church structurally without regard to ideology, we have the laity of the church, all 14-15+ million members co-comprising the faith community. We have the educators, theologians, and administrators of the church across all divisions. We have the executives of the General Conference Corporation. And we also have the various publishing branches of the church, including publications from Signs of the Times to the Nichols era SDA Bible Commentary. The body is not all toes, and notwithstanding your focus on either the now-28 FBs or the Ellen White library as The Voice Of The Church, this is not a univocal community. Because it is a whole, it contains both its innovators and its reactionaries.
As a comparison point, Glenn Beck is no more or less American than is Cornel West. They both reflect on America. Neither of them speaks for America any more than they speak for each other. But if an alien came to Earth and asked for a sample of an American, either would suffice.
My comment about the ahistorical movement of the church over time derives from the fact that the movements it does make are often made without reference to or sense of prior or contemporary debate. The discussion and flux even among Adventist ministers and theologians that precedes Commentary entries, Bible study guide articles, or more extended treatments like Adams' work on the nature of Christ is often masked by a wish to appear externally unified. And ignoring this very lively discussion tells you little about the community.
The texts of the Bible have varied over the last 2,000 years, but not by that much. Analyzing those texts does tell you something about the politics of translators and compilers, but on its own it says much less than when paired with materials and accounts from the wider Church -- members, ministers, evangelists, and other participants in the life and development of the Church.
All of that said, I'm encouraging you to significantly broaden your "source material." I encourage my mother to do the same.
Where I place my attention is the body of literature where doctrinal matters are derived. I do not look to opinions that are not garnered from the mandate to use the writings of Ellen White as a continuing authority, and those are the source documents that will never change. Because the author is not available to render an opinion that would nullify an earlier view she codified, the source of Adventist doctrine remains as immutable as the Scriptures we have, which have not changed one tiny bit since penned by the original authors. Glacier View will continue to serve as a reminder that those pointing out real deficiencies in SDA doctrinal matters will not be tolerated.VictorC said:No, I haven't - but before it would be of interest, it would need to be demonstrated that it has an effect on altering the Fundamental Beliefs that are derived from source documentation. I remain focused on the source material.
A law that can be broken is not God's law by definition. Universal law is simply that which is. Petulance is no more a challenge to God's law than jumping off a ledge is a challenge to gravity.